Order Artiodactyla (10 Families, 89 Genera, 240 species)

Transcription

Order Artiodactyla (10 Families, 89 Genera, 240 species)
Order Artiodactyla (10 Families, 89 Genera, 240 species)
1.
Feet have even number of well-developed digits (except Tayassu.
which has 3 toes on hind feet). Main axis of foot passes through 3rd
and 4th digits, others are reduced or lost. (paraxonic)
2.
The 3 modern Suborders differ in their types of stomachs, teeth, and
the extent that the metatarsals or metacarpals are fused into a cannon
bone:
Suiformes (pig-like forms) have non-ruminating stomachs, bunodont
teeth, and the metatarsals and metacarpals are not fused
Tylopoda (camelids) have a 3-chambered ruminating stomach, selenodont
teeth, and the metatarsals and metacarpals fused for most of their
length, but not the distal ends (near feet)
Ruminantia (deer, antelopes, giraffes, other bovids, etc.) have a 4chambered ruminating stomach, selenodont teeth, and fused
metatarsals and metacarpals. All families except Tragulidae and
Moschidae have some form of horns or antlers.
Family Suidae (pigs, hogs: 5 genera, 19 species)
• Native to Eurasia and Africa,
but widely introduced
•thick, sparsely haired skin
•long, narrow, sloping skull
•large, ever-growing canines
form tusks that curve upward
•molars bunodont
•eat broad range of plant
material, carrion, will also kill
and eat small animals
•mostly forested and brushy
habitats, warthogs in savannas
Sus
Phacochoerus africanus
Babyrousa babyrussa
Family Tayassuidae (peccaries: 3 genera, 3 species)
•Southwestern US through
Argentina
•smaller than most suids: about
30 kg (suids can get up to about
200 kg, although some species
are small)
•canines tusk-like, but directed
outward, not upward; upper slide
against lower making sharp
edges
Tayassu pecari
•less carnivorous than suids,
molars bunodont and squarish
•deserts to tropical forests
Pecari tajacu
Family Hippopotamidae (hippos: 2 genera, 2 species)
•Africa south of Sahara; pygmy
hippo only in western Africa
•Hippopotamus up to 3600 kg,
Hexaprotodon only about 180 kg
•amphibious, restricted to areas
near water but comes on shore at
night to graze
•skin glands exude reddish, oily
substance; mostly hairless except
bristles on snout
•bunodont molars, tusk-like canines
•common hippo gregarious, pygmy
hippo solitary or in pairs
Family Camelidae (camels, llamas: 3 genera, 4 species)
•Camelus in Africa and Asia, Lama
and Vicugna in S. Am.
•metacarpals and metatarsals only
partly fused, distal end of foot split;
broader foot for support in soft sand
•selenodont, incisors and canines
present
•herbivorous, grazers; gregarious,
diurnal
•run with odd stride, both legs on
same side of body swing together
•camels up to 700 kg, guanaco about
140 kg, vicuna only 55 kg
Lama guanico
Vicugna vicugna
Family Tragulidae (chevrotains, mouse deer: 3 genera, 8 species)
•central Africa and SE Asia
•tropical forests
•small, delicate (2.5 – 4.6 kg)
•most similar in body form to
ancestral ruminants
•upper canines tusk-like (esp.
males), cheek teeth selenodont
Hyemoschus aquaticus
•no antlers or horns
•secretive, solitary
•3-chambered stomach
Tragulus kanchil
Family Moschidae (musk deer: 1 genus, 7 species)
Moschus moschiferus
•Siberia and Himalayas, northern parts of SE Asia
•no antlers, tusk-like upper canines (mostly in males)
•smallish, about 18 kg
•musk gland in abdomen of males, used in perfume industry
•all species endangered, now mostly in captivity
Family Cervidae (deer types: 3 subfamilies, 19 genera, 51 species)
•most of N. and S. America, Europe, Asia, NW Africa (but not
south of Sahara), widely introduced
•appeared in Miocene in Asia, migrated to N. Am. by late
Miocene, then to S. Am. in Pleistocene
•males of most species have antlers, females also may have antlers
in Rangifer (caribou or reindeer)
•4 species only have single spikes instead of full racks (Mazama,
Elaphodus, Pudu, Muntiacus); Chinese water deer (Hydropotes)
have no antlers, but tusks like musk deer
•range of sizes from about 8 kg (Pudu) to 800 kg (Alces)
•selenodont cheek teeth
some Cervids
Hydropotes inermis –
Chinese water deer
Pudu pudu - South America
Mazama americana – South
America, red brocket deer
more Cervids
(the 3 you need to know)
Cervus elaphus
Alces alces
Odocoileus virginianus
and just a few more Cervids
Elaphurus davidianus – Pere David’s deer
Rangifer tarandus
Axis axis – originally from
southern Asia, but widely
introduced in Europe and S. Am.
Family Giraffidae (giraffe and okapi: 2 genera, 2 species)
•Giraffa in Africa south of the
Sahara, Okapia in Congo region
•giraffe: savannas, moderately
wooded areas, semi-deserts; okapi
in dense forest; both browsers
•giraffe is large (about 1800 kg,
about 5.5 at head)
•“horns” comprised of distinct
bone, fused to frontals but not
growing out of them, covered by
skin; present in both sexes
•giraffes may form groups, okapis
are solitary; male giraffes fight by
swinging their heads
Just for scale...
Family Antilocapridae (pronghorn: 1 genus, 1 species)
•western North America
•open grassland and semi-desert
• highly cursorial; next fastest
sprinter after cheetah, but with
greater endurance
•unique horns: keratin sheath is
shed each year as new sheath
grows underneath it; females may
have horns, but if so they are
smaller than those of males
•selenodont cheek teeth; both
graze and browse, but especially
on sagebrush
Family Bovidae (all the remaining ungulates! antelopes, cattle,
sheep, goats, etc.: 8 subfamilies, 50 genera, 143 species)
•most widespread and diverse family of ungulates
•native to Africa, Europe, Asia, North America...introduced to
South America and Australia
•hypsodont and selenodont cheek teeth, with no upper incisors or
canines
•4-chambered, ruminating stomachs
•all species have paired horns on males and usually on females (1
species of antelope has 4 horns: Tetracerus); horns grow
throughout life, can have a variety of shapes
•smallest antelopes about 2.5 kg, to large bison, cattle, and elands
around 1000 kg
some Bovids
Bison bonasus – European wood bison
Bison bison – N Am bison
Ovis canadensis – bighorn sheep
How lame is that? We have hardly any bovid specimens for you to
learn, not even the other important North American ones! here are
2 more North American bovids you should be familiar with...
Ovibos moschatus - muskoxen
Oreamnos americanus –
mountain goats
of course, Bovids reach their greatest diversity in Africa and Asia
some “cattle-type” and other large Bovids
Syncerus caffer
Bubalus bubalis
Connochaetes taurinus
Taurotragus oryx
a few goat and sheep types...
Hemitragus jemlahicus
Capra ibex
Ovis dalli
Rupicapra rupicapra
lots of antelope types....
Aepyceros melampus
Madoqua guentheri
Dorcatragus megalotis
Saiga borealis
Oryx gazella
Hippotragus niger